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Pre-game warm ups
14:00 left until tip off. Home Team A is warming up. Visiting Team B runs out of their locker room and jogs around the court 1 time to start their warm ups and proceeds to their half of the court.
I know this should be prevented from happening, but if not stopped in time, is there a penalty for this? |
Yes this is a T if you observe it and your jurisdiction makes this clear this is not supposed to take place. It is expressed in our state to prevent this by going to where the teams enter and make sure they do not run around or go under the opponents basket and go directly to their area of the court. It is usually easily preventable if you are out on the court at the proper time. Again I would follow the standards of your area first. This is not as clearly stated in the rulebook other than being on the right side of the court (I do not have the rulebook in front of me right now).
Peace |
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AremRed: I doubt that you will that you find this situation in the NFHS Rules Book from any particular year but it falls under the taunting section of Rule 10. Regarding Casebook Plays. You would be incorrect in not enforcing a Casebook Play Ruling just because it is not in the current Casebook. Once a Casebook Play Ruling is issued it remains in effect until the Rule is changed such that the rule change changes the Casebook Play Ruling. Casebook Play Rulings are the same as Supreme Court rulings: They are the law of the land until the law is changed. MTD, Sr. |
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I happen to know that POE because I am on this Forum, no other reason. If the NFHS was so dead-set on this being 100% a technical for taunting, every time, then perhaps they should add it to the current year rules/case book so I can know for sure. I believe I'm on shaky ground when I start calling stuff based on what the rule book said 6 years ago. |
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As I responded to Welpe above, how am I expected to know that the NFHS 6 years ago said this is taunting if they never keep it in the current rule book?? |
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Its considered unsportsmanlike conduct. Are you sure it was 10-11' it seems to me to be longer than that when that came out.
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2010,11 poe #2
SPORTING BEHAVIOR: Teams entering the gymnasium prior to the contest should not run through the area occupied by the opposing team or under the basket where opponents are warming up. Teams should only enter, job and warm up on their half of the court. Gatherings intended to motivate a team after the warm-up period, during or following player introductions and post-game celebrations should be performed in the area directly in front of the team bench. If during the pre-game or half-time warm-up period one team leaves the floor, the other team may not use the entire court; teams may only warm up on their half of the court. Only authorized personnel (cheerleaders, athletic trainers, managers, administrators, etc.) should be permitted on the floor; all spectators should be in designated areas.
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AremRed: You took the first step by registering with Officiating.com. That way you get the benefit of asking historians of the rules like a bald old geezer like me. I started officiating basketball in 1971. I have officiated boys'/girls' H.S. since 1971. Until either 1978, boys'/girls' H.S. and men's college basketball was played under the National Basketball Committee of the United States and Canada. In 1978 that Committee split into the NFHS and NCAA Men's committees. I officiated women's college basketball from 1974 to 2008. Until 1984 women's college basketball was played under the National Assn. of Girls' and Women's in Sports Rules, and under the NCAA Women's Rules Committee since then. I also officiated men's jr. college and college JV from 1993 to 2008. And was a USA Basketball Referee (FIBA Rules) from 1993 to 2003. I have been a rules interpreter and have sat on IAABO National Committees and have one friend who officiated in the NBA and two that have officiated in the WNBA. I have been fortunate to have been able to know some of the finest rules people in the sport and have tried to pass forward the history of the rules that I learned from them. It was in my blood from the very beginning that I would be a historian for the rules. I wish that the NFHS and the NCAA would create a free online data base of the Rules Books, Casebooks, Rules Interpretations, Approved Rulings, Officials Manuals and CCA Manuals. It was be a great contribution to basketball officiating education. MTD, Sr. |
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Not everything that is unsportsmanlike can be in the books and what you can do.
This arose from some fighting issues amongst rival schools. In Kentucky at one point they banned the post game handshakes. |
Center Circle Antics ...
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